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HomeMy WebLinkAboutNCD980602163_20010311_Warren County PCB Landfill_SERB C_Press Clippings, 1992 - 2001/ CLIPPING SERVICE 1115 HILLSBORO fl. RALEIGH, NC 27603 \;,/ TEL. (919) 833-2079 NEws· It OIIIRVII WIIOH, N,& SEP -1 ·98 ~-'\ Focus on the PCB site. · We are writing to convey a united request that we are making to the legis- latureb' help in protecting two commu- nities threatened by dangerous industri- , aldumps. M,our readers may know,··tbe state's commitmen,t to begin detoxification of • · the failing PCB landfill in Warren County is in jeopardy. Meanwhile, the state con- tinues to leave open the possibility of licensing a seven-state nuclear waste site at the Wake and Chatham County, bordei; near the town of Moncure. Warren County citizens have been concerned for years that the PCB land- fill would fall; that concern has now been confirmed. Meanwhile; Chatham . citizens have lived for 10 years under the threat of a nuclear waste dump which appears increasingly dangerous as time goes by. . Each of our county b0al'ds of commis- sioners has decided to show support between the two communities. We now · , are asking members of the legislature to join our efforts by expressing, to all lead- ers of the Iious~ mid Senate, their desire to remove the, ~xic threat from both of 1 these communities. We ask that the state terminate. plans for a nuclear waste site and focus its energies oµ cleaning up the state-owned PCB land- fill in Warren County. .. We appreciate that The N&O has pro- vided. news. coverage for both of these issues, as well as editorial support for the PCB clean-up and to stop efforts at the radioactive waste site. . . MARGARET POLLARD Pittsboro . Warrenton Chair, Chatham County Board of Commissioners JAMES HOLLOWAY Chair, Warreri County Board of Commisi;;ioners- ✓ CUPPING SERVICE 1115 HILLSBORO RALEIGH, NC 27603 TEL (919) 833-2079 NEWS & OBS!RVD RALIIOH, N, C. AUG 7 98 B site ed a big cleanup. BY JEROME B. WEBER adsorbent carbon obtained by heat-, AND Ross B. LEIDY iJ:ig granulated cbarcoal to exhaust IALIIGH contained gases and adsorbed are several ebemicaJs, used in au adsorption, nceptions relative to water purification, solvent PCB-laced soil storage ~ wast.e treatment and as m Warren County, and an antidote to certain ingested poi~ . is a dire need of sons; . lmowledge in'volving the principles 5) Universal antidote-an ingre- of bloevailability and toxicology dient that causes a toxicant to before the state takes any further become leas harmful by binding the action. poison and remo9ing it from The first misconception is that solution or changing it into a harm- base-catalyzed decomposition less chemieal. (BCD) is a safer or more~ The principle ~bioavailability is method of disposing of PCBs (poly-the basis on which the disciplines chlorinated biphenyls) than incin-of plant nutrition, crop production eration or ether methods, or, in th~ and pesticide registration are built. case of the PCB-laced soil, if any The major reason that soil testing .further treatment is even laboratories exist is the need to f.-,.,.neeessacy: · · --,_ · • 4 determine-biologically available ~ --! Safe, effec&re incinerators are nutrients in soils. Only a wrtion of being used at present to dispose of the nutri~nts present in soil is toxic waste by many industries, but accessible to plants _and other the question organisms. If particular nutrients. POINT OF VIEW remains, "Is the are not present in adequate quanti- PCB in the soil ties, fertilizer and: other soil amend- toxic?" ments must be applied. In addition, the In the registration of pesticides, Environmental all products must be tested for Protection Agency their toxic effects to living will soori publish new, less-organisms. when present in ail; stringent PCB disposal regulations, water or soil. Some products are expected to reduce annual disposal extremely toxic to wildlife when costs by $178 million .. · present in water and are classitied Referring to the Warren County , as supertoxic pesticides. A few are site as a toxic waste disposal site or 10 to 100 times more toxic than this landfill is inaccurate. It is merely a and could be called super supertox- storage site, as biologists know. ic pesticides. How do those The first Qllestion that should have · products get registered for use on been asked is, !'Js the PCB in the lawns and croplands if they are so sto:r:age site biologically active?" toxic to wildlife? Not "is it present?" or "Is it The answer lies in their extreme- extmictable with hydrocarbon sol-ly low bioavailability when bound to vents like hexane or benzene?" soil colloids, particularly to organic PCB is known to be toxic (harmful, . matter and clay minerals. destructive or poisonous to living These toxieants are even less organisms), but is it ----------, toxic when bound to biologically available I I activated carbon. The ~~-~~~~!~~~ ~~-., _ _,__ _ T ,.,,,_,,, .,._,,, ,.,.,.~ soil binding (known 'CA Cl~KIUJ.~ UJ .Ll'YUJ.E, -~ .,_,." ..,. V'V--1--.:,·"-:l\;rVaJUPlll1f\J'>-f'h1-..-lil organisms>•in the reasons to think registered pesticides Warren County stor-range from 50 to 100, age site soil? PCB-.laced soil less than one-third Scientists fammar in Wanren that for PCBs. Thus, with the principles of soil bound (fixed) bioavailability and County irs not PCB is less bioavail-toxicology are satis-a toxi,c hazaT<d able (toxic) then ed th~t th~ QrolllJSI",!!!. ~e=i,-i==-:=S8r;a;; these-superie-xic pes ma ebyGovernor tot public. ticides. Hunt to detoxify (to Therefore, the first counteract or destroy question that should the toxic properties ....._ _______ ___, be asked about the of) the PCB-contaminated roadside toxicity (bioavailability) of PCB in soil in question was met when the the soil in the Warren County site road shoulders were treated with is,: "Is the PCB biologically activated carbon and the soil mixed aMailable?" and transported to the storage site. This question has already been What are the principles of biologi-8lllswered in many of our research cal availability and toxicology? publications and in hundreds of Let's first aefine some additioncil other publications, but could readi- terms: ly be answered again by bioassay- 1) Biologically available or img soil samples taken from tQe bioavailable -nutrients or storage site. These bioassays are toxicants that are accessible for dome routinely by the state-agricul- use by living organisms and corre-tm:e department, by investigators lated with that fraction atractable at N.C. State Universi~ and by pri- with polar solvents like water or vate contractors. aqueous buffers; i · f scientists had made the toxiean a are resen m a orm"""· ... r--~ecision as to whether or not the or position in soil media where they activated carbon-~ted, PCB- are not accessible to living laced road shoulder soils needed to organisms and are not extractable be picked up and transported to a in significant quantities using polar sterage site, the answer would solvents, e,g.,_nutrieats in soil min-have been no. The decision, howev- erals or toxicants bound to activat-er, was made by lawyers, who inter- ed carbon; preted the law to mean that soil 3) Bioassay-a technique in contaminated by toxic substances · which the presence of a chemieal is must be moved to a storage site, quantififfii by using liVing even though the substances may no , organisms, rather than carrying longer be toxic. , out chemical analysis; We suggest the following: 1) the 4) Activated cari>Qn -highly soil in the Warren County storage - Jerome B. Weber, 'Ph.D., is a professor of crop science at N.C. State University; Ross B. Leidy, Ph.D., is a professor of toxicology at N. C State. Also contributing to this article were Eugene J. Kamprath, Ph.D., former head of site be bio~ssaye<l to determine the · the university's soil science depart- , ment, and Fred H. Yelverton, !. Ph.D., an associate professor of crop science. bioavailability (toxicity) of the PCB 1 that it contains, 2) the soon-to-be- published EPA disposal regulations for PCB be examined, and 3) a task force of scientists. with knowledge applicable to the situation, and free from financial gains to be made by the decisions rendered, should be appointed to advise and make rec- ommendations that are environmentally safe and economi- cally sound. I . I I I ✓ CLIPPING SERVICE 1115 HILLSBORO RALEIGH, NC 27603 TEL. (919) 833-2079 I 1 1 DAILY DISPA'IQI ' ··taaRION, N. a. JUL -26 °~8 -. ----.. ·--~--- By CHARLIE RICHARDS Daily Dispatch Writer Ballance, as well as Gov. Jim Hunt, his Department of Envi- ronment and Natural Resources RALEIGH -Just as had been and Warren County citizens are predicted, the budget adopted by all committed to detoxification, the N.C. Howse of ~resen.ta-which Ballance had specified in tives this week does not include his Senate budget provision. any fond ur deal with the RC.~~As:..1r Mike Kelly, sP9kesmap for landfill in Warren County. t e Division-of ·, -asie, "I am not surprised," said Sen. explained, the removal proposal Frank Ballance of Warren, who required an· all-or-nothing bade-managed to include $3 mil-appropriation., lea,ving n,o room lion in the Senate's version of the for a. token -budget item such as 1:iudget · to begin the process of the Senate's $3 million, which detoxification that a ~Warren~ would finance the final design of State group has recommended. the cleanup. ·. Ballance, who as Deputy Pres-The PCB issue will be one of -ident Pro Tern of the Senate is a many to be settled in the House- . part 1 <?f that b~dy's top leader-Senate negotiations that will ship, suggested that no appro-start next week. Both Ballance priation in the House budget and Rep. Jim Crawford of "may be better than the alterna-Oxford estimated that process tive." _ will ~e about a month. House interests had backed a There is more spending than proP9sal to haul the landfill's there is maney in the budgets, ' toxic con~nts to another state, plus the House includes Mdi- 1 at a 'preliminary estimated cost tional twr cuts, said Ba,llance, so of $16 million, as compared to "a lot of things will be left on the the estimated $24 million to cutting rooµi floor." . detoxify the mateip.al on site in Warren County. Please s~e PCB, Page 3A PCB, from page one He added, "We're going to there · have been no develop-fight for our position." ments at the federal level. While the $3 million :PCB "There are no funds commit-item is small compared to the ted," said chief aide Johnny millions involved in such issues Barnes. as Smart Start and the tax cuts, The PCB · cleanup issue has Ballance said legfslative nego-developed this way: -tiators can cut small items here The State-Warren Working and there and arrive . at a fuial Group concluded its work this . product both si4es accept. year, · finding that the landfill Rep. 9i"awford took note of can be detoxified for $24 million, one factor that will be working using a chemical process, reµiov~ against the position of the Hunt . ing forever the problem created administration and the Warren by burial of the chemicals in the County committee. 1980s. " · · · He said the leader of the Gov. Hunt then included in House group that will handle his budget $15 million toward the PCB issue .will . be Rep. -that proc-ess, with provisions Frank Mitchell, Republican of allowing use of other funds to Iredell. . . -~ ,... . --finish the job. · ·· Mitchell is an advocate of the -Then other in,terests suggest- removal concept. •. . . . . ed the possibly cheaper method Crawford also said there has of hauling the material away. · been some suggestion in the · Ballance obtained the $3 mil- House that federal funds may be lion in the Senate budget, com- made available for the project._ mitted to detoxification, and the . But Ballance said there have House responded this week with be.en no new developments its zero iµlocation. along that . line since . . Warren residents went to Congresswoman Eva Clayton, Raleigh earlier this month to also of Warren, promised she demonstrate on behalf of a final would try to secure federal funds solution to the environmental to help.-· ~ . question. It would be "short-sighted to Now the solution is caught Up count on federal funds," in the political maneuvering of a Ballance said: Democratic . Senate and a "First, we must do our own." Republican House as they try to- Friday, Rep. Clayton's arrive at a budget ·both can Washington office' ;~!~i>nfirmed;.r '-accent':-~0\•. :. . . o.c,.;-jl . -rs::"~:": - f ... _ ... ~""·''-'••'-' f ,i;d :;)w1 0.;,.l)J..,"$ 1:.-,.,:·,1.;"! . 2:..~\,.:;i;_Z;+-·• ,d;,·;;~ :l .. .,i1:iOiTiiJ_()i C 1115 HILLSBORO ✓ CUPPING SERVICE \ RALEIGH, HC 27603 TEL. (919) 833--2079 ,a\ANGl.i 1usu'!lll5 \ IA~I\Ot4, N,C. ---------------0nemU..c_saddest_~m~ -~-e~dd-~~-~~ty~~~:~uop!~ili~ ~ North Carolina history was the dedsion lion through a procea called -i.e cat-attention of Wdlaw Environmental moval flopped. jn 1982 to bury 40,900 cubic yards of Semces Inc., a C.Olumbia; S.C.-based firni. And the "working group," which has contaminated soil in poor, rural W 'd lh'ink that Jll8l1llld in June with Safety-Kleen studied the issue for years and has no ~-•-you Inc. tq create the nation's_ largest indU8'-business community tepresent.ation, also Now, Wamm Qount.y has the chance to 1--:,,,.la:lon, u,ould trial ,mate 88l'Via!. The combined compe-is leery 6fLaid1aw. remove the filthy dirt forever, jf our gay-"'&'-n;y has more than 400,000 cust.omers an'd Jim Noles; an. operations manager at emor and legislaron use common senae; • • al --•..:-.. lll1lUal sales topping $1.2 billion. Laidlaw's Reidsville plant, said such The J>CB-laced dirt was illegally n:,ou,e __,_., After its own study, Laid1aw concluded feal'S mystify him. "It's a vecy doable job, sprayed along North Carolina highways 'laspa,yers ,S it could }pad the dirt and aqjacent water not unlike what we do regularly in our by contr.actors of Raleigh-based Ward into railcars and ship it to a facility in business," he said. "Laidlaw has done Transformer C.O. North Carolina's deci-miUion, whieh Utah. some enormous projects and a job of this sion to put the waste in Wan811 County, Its all inclusive price: $16 million. size just would not be a problem." 60 miles northeast of Raleigh, i,perked a in a,jUBf wor'ld You'd think Warren County folks The EPA has approved similar waste-national outrage that helped coin the would tw!joice at getting rid of the PCBs. removal projects, on repeated occaisions, term, "environmental racism," referriqg UJOUld l,e invetd«l · And you'd think legislators would rejoice Noles said. to the tendency to put dumps in poo~, at 8IM,!)g taxpayers $8 million, which in State Rep. Frank Mitchell of Iredell . mostly black communities. l ~ in Warren County,s aju$t world :would be invested in Warren County is promoting Laidlaw's offer as a Gov. J'un Hunt in 1982 promised ~hr County's public schools. commonsense answer. He thinks $8 mil-, 17,500 l'eSidents of Warren County t~ p,ubl'ic school& You'd be wrong. Sen. Frank Ballance lion, even in a $12 billion budget, is sig-the dirt would be contained >in the Jr., Ute Warrenton. Democrat who has nificant. We agree. "Cadillac" of gumps. , ebmnpioned the cause of dump critics for "It's a valid approach, it can't be de-. But the. dump is leakip_g. Hunt also al~ decompoaition," or BCD. years, is dead .set, against Laidlaw's offer. nied and it's a whole lot cheaper than the pl~ that the state would clean ug e Those backing that process were a During a WUNC-TV report on the issue, alternative," Noles said. mess when technology made it possible.. "working group" made up of govern-he said he'd never heard of Laidlaw, he How about it, Gov. Hunt? 'Fhat day lias arrived. After spending ment officials, residents and environ-.didn't•think it was a credible bid and .L""'. $1 million on a study, the state conclua. mentalists. l5iil · .:::zgounty couldn't risk another en- CUPPING SERVICE 1115 HILLSBORO RALEIGH, NC 27803 TEL (919) 833-2079 DAil. Y DISPATCH HINDIRION, N. c. JUL l 5 98 wa · 1en PCB group plans Raleigh action • • ., I OXFORD-MembersoftheJointWarren/State · able to get $3 million included in the Senate bud-PCB Working Group said Tuesday they will gath-· get, with provisions that would allow otber·funds er at the state legislature Wednesday to promote for ~e project expected to cost $24 million. • . funding of the clean-up of the PCB landfill in . The House will begin ·considering the fund this Warren County. week, and Working Group members plan to visit Working Group representatives anno~ced a members ru1king for support. Some members of news conference in front of the leg:ialative buila-the Hause have advocated a process that involves ing. They plan to present a lett.er to Gov. Jim Hunt hauling the contaminated soils to another state asking for "extra · efforts to secure funding f0r : mthout treatment, which they say will be cheap-deW>xification of the site." ~r. The Working Group is made up of Warren citi-Sen. Frank Ballance of Warren County has beem zens, state officials and state environmental orga-· asked.to participate. nizations. It used a million dollars of state funds Gov. Hunt presented a budget including $15 over the past few years seeking a detoxification million for the clean-up project. Sen. Ballance was method it now wants funded. · DELA Y EO REACTION http ://www.fayettevillenc.com/foto .. ./content/ I 998/tx98jun/e03 I I sxx.htrn I of I Wednesday, June 3, 1998 DELAYED REACTION Wheels of justice have ground too long in PCB case Gov. Jim Hunt is bound to be acting from a sense of moral obligation in seeking $15 million to clean up a toxic-waste site in Warren County. There certainly are no bragging rights up for grabs. Twenty years have passed since Buck Ward of Ward Transformer Co. had PCBs unlawfully dumped along many miles of roadside, much of it in this region. Seventeen years have passed since Ward went to federal prison for what can fairly be characterized as a willful, deliberate assault on the public health. Sixteen years have passed since the state buried 40,000 cubic yards of contaminated soil in Warren County. fts citizens protested; more than 500 were arrested. Sixteen years have passed since Hunt promised, in writing, "to press for detoxification of the site." (Hunt thinks the site is "safe as it stands," but, to his credit, does not expect the people of Warren County to accept that as fulfillment of his pledge.) Five years have passed since it was learned that the containment system at the landfill had allowed water intrusion measured at far more than a million gallons. And if the General Assembly complies with the governor's request, the cleanup theoretically will be completed almost a quarter-century after the initial offense. That's how progress is measured in a county that is practically the embodiment of political irrelevance: poor, black, and by current standards sparsely populated. It's best to be cautious about such judgments. It would have been foolish for the state, in service to some twisted concept of "justice," to put the PCB landfill in, say, downtown Charlotte. Population density was a legitimate consideration. But anyone who was paying attention at the time Warren County "helped us out" under duress knows perfectly well why it was drafted. And it 's not hard to figure out why the cleanup languished for so long. No one meant Warren County ill, but its concerns didn't jiggle the needle on anyone's electoral meter. That's a shame --a disgrace --but Hunt is right. The only way to make this episode more shameful would be for the General Assembly to prolong it further. News I Community I Marketplace I Search Local material copyright 1998 Fayetteville (N .C.) Observer-Times 2/27/99 12:08 PM RALEIGH, N.C. FINAl:.i!DIINtN-50aNIS M . . Warren activists·urge Hunt to keep pledge, clean_ up PCB dump Science finds a way, :,,:~;=:;~co:=:! after 15 years, but it · toro!..~~!dthestatebaw&gl'eedoa could cost $24 million· ~~~:~=~~~:!r1!::: else to act: Gbv. JlmHunt, who promlaed BY JAMES ELI SHin'ER i8 )'e8l'II ago to clean up the 'i1lilmil Counl;y STAFF W11TU dump as soon as the mean■ became To protect Warren County from a state "appropriate and feaalble. • . hazardous.waste landftll, Dollie Burwell has "We've done all that we can do," said lain In front of trucks, spent nights in jail llurwel];acommunltyleaderwhowmmb-andtrawledaround theCOl!!l\cytoexplaln U.S. R.w.EvaCJa,vt.on "Allthat'sleltnowls. how minority coomnmitles such as hers can . for the governor to mue good on bis word• end up as toxic dumping grounds. This spring, Hunt and the General Even after the state buried 40,000 cubic Assembly will ciecide whether to appro-yards of PClkontamlnated IP! Courmiles prlate some or all of the nearlf $24 mWloa the state tbina It wiD COiii tD dean up the dump. 1n the proceu, ~ could ■ettle a conlllct that lraumalled~--w-aparbd a graa-raat.s ~ lhddng ilD9lromnentall and dvllrlpbs. Lut month, ■tate ~ oll-ciall, Warren Counw Nlidmtl 11111 ..i-rGDDMl!l!!Dllw..-•a1111WIII-vate the burled wute, ..,... lllmmlea■ throu&h an inllo9alml~ lrelltllalt andreatontheu«n ... Hmry~depq~ofmvl-ronment and natural -.nee. uld bia departmentwlllalklluntlll...._maaey b-tbeJ!n98dlnbis~hodset, SH ~ IIIGE 4" Dollie .,,_. ...... at .._to dump, wllh ,--w fielckol PCB-lociild 90illnthe ....... $hell waifing for 'envinln-..... ....... . UMP In September 1912, · prolestetl against , PCB dumpina block ,,-. ~- Road 1604 inWarren County. About 30 pot~ were arrested:· after the photogn;iph was taken. • I ~. f " down on roadways. National civil The B~ process coob the con- ·CONl\NUE0 FROM ,PAGE, 1 A rights figures such as~ Cha . l ~soilina~-and Joseph Lowery jained i~ . furnace; stripping oft the dllo~ · ' demonsfrations., , , ,, I DlOlec;ules and producing~ liann-,, The images of.state troopel:s ~ ' less dirt. Joel Hirsdlborn, a science "This is as good a time as ever," said Lancaster~ who along with• Burwell chairs a working group on the PCB landftll.,"lt is projected that tbewbole thing will take tbreeye&l'$. Tl:!ere are three years left in the Hunt administration." ~ Walsh," a Hunt spokesman, said the governor is committed to ensuring-the health and safety of Warren residents,' but he declined . to say whether the budget would inclµde money .for cleanup, · The dump opponents' principal 'advocate ·in the General Assembly · is Sen .. Frank Ballance Jr. of Warrenton. "This is like 1! festering sore," he said. "People are appre- hensive about the presenre of this poison in the ground" The conflict g~s back 20 years, when two ,men working as cont;rac- tors of the Ward 'lhmsformer Co. of Raleigh illegally sprayed waste oil along roads in 14 counties. The oil was laced with.PCBs, or po)ychlori- nated biphenyls; whicb were used to ihsulate electrical transfomiers - until the federal gm.oernment banned th~m in 1977. The Environmenj;al Protection Agency says PCBs can cause cancer. -Fourmenwereconvictedofcrim-· iiiaI charges in Ute dumping, and the EPA and the state took over respon- sibility for disposing of the waste. In his second terrii" as governoi; Hunt decided to have the soil scraped up and buried in Warren County. Warren is a rural county in north- .eastern North Carolina. The aver- age resident there earns less money than in ·all but three other counties, and 57 percent of the res-idents are black. · The ~p trucks full of contami- natecl soil arriving on Warren'scoun- tty roads in September 1982 met-a phalanx of protesters,.black and _white, ~o chant.eel, picketed and lay . in riot gear carrying away ministers adviser to the PCB working-group, and mothers alike played on the said the process can reduce ttiepoJ- national Jle'!YB and helped~ Iutruits toafewdrilmsdoilY,~ a~tca1;1RU.tits~~ whicli\Wbldprobablybe~to dubbed enviromnental~ . l l 8D incin(ll"lltor. . · 11 ;, "'Ibey~ a line In tb_e dirt' sa.v-Similar technology bas been uaed ing~to~ .. ~md, to clean up contamination at a for. \ environmentalraosm, said Robert mer wood treatment plant near . Bullard, a sociology professor a~ Morrisville and at a U.S. Navy base · Clark Atlanta University and the . G -· , ~d~boob!Jlltbesub,· . m Tb~~:975 millinn ~HmAte fo~ Ject. Studies by Bullard and others th cl • did:~t pl 'KP_n and, foundthat~dumps,incin--'"I"'~ eaniw, no, ~-;--, , erators,chemicalfactatiesandotle Deborah Ferrucci~, d~p oppo- facilities were located dispropor-nents who have-split with Burwell tionately in minority communities. and other activists in ~e working The Warren County protests group. The Ferr_ucc1os wanted prompted Hunt t.o promise that "the another $200,000 for an independent . state will push as hard as it can for watchdog to o~ee the process. detoxification of the landfill-when · "From the history of the state so and if the appropriate and feasible far, they're not going to catch their technology is developed." In the own mistakes," Deborah Ferruccio meantime, the state assured dubi-said. . ous residents that the plastic-lined S\ill, the Ferruccios support the dump was the "Cadillac of landfills." . · technology. A legislative committee Today tbe dump is a fenced-off isscheduledtohearthedetailsApril field ne11r a cow pasture where 27.And~tbe~sspokes- skies stretch wide over rolling hills. , man, said Hunt's commitment to his But its bucolic appearance is mis-1982 promise has not changed leading: The state acknowl~ in. ~r Burwell, who went to jail for 1993 that the landfill had filled with her beliefs-but now counsels the ia ~ ofwa~ posing what two sci-federal government from her seat · en~ts have~~ a tJ:ireat to con-· on the National Environmental -~ted~~ h 1n,,n Justice Advisory Council, thi~ ,o ~ , , ce e't"'~ spring offers a similar opportunicy obtain $1 million from the General for a historic turnaround. ' . · As~emb)y f~r tests of technology, "Oth · ommunities across the · wliile a working groupdgovernment er c , . officials, residents and environmen-country !ire watch11,1g to see 1f talistslielpednegotiateasolution. War.re? County agam can_be a Last year, tests by ETG ]J:nvirons ~odel,Just as W~n Coun~ ~ th: mental Inc. of West Chester, Pa., · birthplace CJ!-enwonmentalJustice, showed that'cbemical technology Burwell S81d . . . . could safely dispose of the waste. "People are w&1tmg to see if a ETG used base catalyzed decom-statE: that dumped P.n a ~r com-position (BCD), a technique devel-mUD1ty can turn ariiwui SI~ down oped by the federal government as at the table, worlt out a eohitioo and an alternative to incineration. When · live up to its word.'° . hazardous waste is burned, it can · JONS Eli Slillla--lieiwacW create toxic ash and air pollution, at 836-5701 or~ · 14/11/983'\larren activists urge Hunt to keep pledge, clean up PCB dump ,. wysiwyg://313/http://www.news-observcr.com/daily/ I 998/04/ I 1/nc00. html 1 of3 Select a search: News Archive if§ Today's Obits Classified ..... Fl Enter keywords: ~ Get Search Help EJ...:pand Search MAU E TPlACE • Yellow Pages • Classified • TriangleJobs.com • Cars.com • Apartments.com • Real Estate • NewHomeNetwork • Merchandise • Services Feedback User Agreement © The News & Observer Publishing Co. 215 S. McDowell St. Raleigh, NC 27602 Main: 919.829.4500 Online: 919.829.461 l Warren activists urge Hunt to keep pledge, clean up PCB dump Science finds a way, after 15 years, but it could cost $24 million By JAMES ELI SHIFFER, Staff Writer To protect Warren County from a state hazardous-waste landfill, Dollie Burwell has lain in front of trucks, spent nights in jail and traveled around the country to explain how minority communities such as hers can end up as toxic dumping Staff Photo by Justin Carlson Dollie Burwell stands at entrance to dump, with reseeded fields of PCB-laced soil in the distance. She is waiting for 'environmental justice.' grounds. Even after the state buried 40,000 cubic yards of PCB-contaminated soil four miles from her home near the Afton community, Burwell kept working to figure out how to get rid of it. Now she and the state have agreed on the cleanup technology. So, in Burwell's opinion, the time has come for someone else to act: Gov. Jim Hunt, who promised 16 years ago to clean up the Warren County dump as soon as the means became "appropriate and feasible." "We've done all that we can do," said Burwell, a community leader who works for U.S. Rep. Eva Clayton. "All that's left now is for the governor to make good on his word." This spring, Hunt and the General Assembly will decide whether to appropriate some or all of the nearly $24 million the state thinks it will cost to clean up the dump. In the process, they could settle a conflict that traumatized a community and sparked a grass-roots movement linking environmentalism and civil rights. Last month, state environmental officials, Warren County residents and environmentalists agreed on a process to excavate the buried waste, render it harmless through an innovative thermal treatment and restore the 2. 5-acre site. Henry Lancaster, deputy secretary of environment and natural resources, said his department will ask Hunt to include money for the project in his forthcoming budget. "This is as good a time as ever," said Lancaster, who along with Burwell chairs a working group on the PCB landfill. "It is projected that the whole thing will take three years. There are three years left in the Hunt administration." 11/29/1999 12:55 PM / J411 l/98l_ Warren activists urge Hunt to keep pledge, clean up PCB dump I wysiwyg://313/http://www.news-observer.com/daily/ 1998/04/ l l /nc00 .html Circulation: 919.829.4700 FRAME I UNFRAME 2 of3 Sean Walsh, a Hunt spokesman, said the governor is committed to ensuring the health and safety of Warren residents, but he declined to say whether the budget would include money for cleanup. The dump opponents' principal advocate in the General Assembly is Sen. Frank Ballance Jr. of Warrenton. "This is like a festering sore," he said. "People are apprehensive about the presence of this poison in the ground." The conflict goes back 20 years, when two men working as contractors of the Ward Transformer Co. of Raleigh illegally sprayed waste oil along roads in 14 counties. The oil was laced with PCBs, or polychlorinated biphenyls, which were used to insulate electrical transformers until the federal government banned them in 1977. The Environmental Protection Agency says PCBs can cause cancer. Four men were convicted of criminal charges in the dumping, and the EPA and the state took over responsibility for disposing of the waste. In his second term as governor, Hunt decided to have the soil scraped up and buried in Warren County. Warren is a rural county in northeastern North Carolina. The average resident there earns less money than in all but three other counties, and 57 percent of the residents are black The dump trucks full of contaminated soil arriving on Warren's country roads in September 1982 met a phalanx of protesters, black and white, who chanted, picketed and lay down on roadways. National civil rights figures such as Ben Chavis and Joseph Lowery joined the demonstrations. The images of state troopers clad in riot gear carrying away ministers and mothers alike played on the national news and helped galvanize a nascent cause that its supporters dubbed "environmental justice." "They drew a line in the dirt saying no to environmental injustice and environmental racism," said Robert Bullard, a sociology professor at Clark Atlanta University and the author of landmark books on the subject. Studies by Bullard and others found that toxic-waste dumps, incinerators, chemical factories and other facilities were located disproportionately in minority communities. The Warren County protests prompted Hunt to promise that "the state will push as hard as it can for detoxification of the landfill when and if the appropriate and feasible technology is developed." In the meantime, the state assured dubious residents that the plastic-lined dump was the "Cadillac of landfills." Today the dump is a fenced-off field near a cow pasture where skies stretch wide over rolling hills. But its bucolic appearance is misleading: The state acknowledged in 1993 that the landfill had filled with 13 feet of water, posing what two scientists have called a threat to contaminated drinking water. Two years later Ballance helped obtain $1 million from the General Assembly for tests of technology, while a working group of government officials, residents and environmentalists helped negotiate a solution. Last year, tests by ETG Environmental Inc. of West Chester, Pa., showed that chemical technology could safely dispose of the waste. ETG used base catalyzed decomposition (BCD), a technique developed by the federal government as an alternative to incineration. When 11/29/1999 12:55 PM L4/ I l/9tl I Warren activists urge 1-iunt to keep pledge, clean up PCB dump I· " wysiwyg:/ /313/http://www.news-observer.com/daily/ 1998/04/11 /ncOO .html 3 of3 hazardous waste is burned, it can create toxic ash and air pollution. The BCD process cooks the contaminated soil in a low-temperature furnace, stripping off the chlorine molecules and producing dry, harmless dirt. Joel Hirschhorn, a science adviser to the PCB working group, said the process can reduce the pollutants to a few drums of oily sludge, which would probably be shipped to an incinerator. Similar technology has been used to clean up contamination at a former wood treatment plant near Morrisville and at a U.S. Navy base in Guam. The $23 .975 million estimate for the cleanup did not please Ken and Deborah Ferruccio, dump opponents who have split with Burwell and other activists in the working group. The Ferruccios wanted another $200,000 for an independent watchdog to oversee the process. "From the history of the state so far, they're not going to catch their own mistakes," Deborah Ferruccio said. Still, the Ferruccios support the technology. A legislative committee is scheduled to hear the details April 27. And Walsh, the governor's spokesman, said Hunt's commitment to his 1982 promise has not changed. For Burwell, who went to jail for her beliefs but now counsels the federal government from her seat on the National Environmental Justice Advisory Council, this spring offers a similar opportunity for a historic turnaround. "Other communities across the country are watching to see if Warren County again can be a model, just as Warren County is the birthplace of environmental justice," Burwell said. "People are waiting to see if a state that dumped on a poor community can turn around, sit down at the table, work out a solution and live up to its word." James Eli Shiffer can be reached at 836-5701 or jshiffer@nando.com [ TOP I NEXT STORY» I NC I HOME PAGE ] I I-800-FLOW£:RS :.c ;_s ·1 _4:gs 6U I ,,. , ''/ifltl n,,awtt.,.-: NEWS BUSINESS I EDITORIAL I N.C. I SPORTS I TRIANGLE 24HR NEWS TOP I BIZ I INFOTECH I NATION I OPINION I POLITICS I SPORTS I WORLD FEATURES A&E I DAY I FAITH I FOOD I HOME I MOVIES IQ I TRAVEL I TRIANGLE GUIDE 124HR ENTERTAINMENT i 24HR HEAL TH MARKETPLACE YELLOW PAGES I CLASSIFIED I AUTO I REAL ESTATE I EMPLOYMENT I MERCHANDISE I SUBSCRIBE I BOOKSTORE I TRIANGLE MARKETPLACE 11/29/1999 12:55 PM OCTOBER 1997 A newsletter from the Office of Minority Health Office of Minority Health Public Health Service U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Environmental Injustice? Landfill Prompts Concern in North Carolina For Massenberg Kearney, the worst part about living less than half a mile from a toxic waste landfill is the uncertainty. He knows that it can take years for the harmful effects of toxic waste exposure to show up. And as far as he knows, it's not clear how much, if at all, his health is at risk. "There's nothing I can really put my hands on," he said. "When I have health problems or when a lot of my animals die, I do wonder if it has anything to do with the landfill." Fifteen years have passed since the state of North Carolina constructed the landfill in Warren County. Not everyone there is concerned about it. But then there are those like Mr. Kearney who have questions: Is the landfill leaking? Is the health of my family in danger? What is the state doing to clean up the site? And why did the state choose my community to contain hazardous waste? The answers vary depending on who you ask, and therein lies a significant source of the frustration and confusion among some Warren County residents. "Sometimes it seems like we're in the same place we were in 1982," said Kearney, referring to when he marched in protests of the landfill. The controversy began in 1978 when oil contaminated with toxic chemicals called polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) was illegally dumped along more than 200 miles of road shoulders in 14 counties in North Carolina. State officials chose a site near the town of Afton to contain the more than 6,000 truckloads of toxic soil. Afton has a population of approxi- mately 1600 and is 85 percent African American. The town is located at the southern end of Warren County, also mostly African American, and one of the poorest counties in North Carolina. Some believe these characteristics led Warren County to become the final choice as the disposal site. "When community members don't have a lot of political and economic resources, it makes it harder to fi ght back," said Ken Ferruccio, a community activist who lives near the landfill and had a major role in the protests. "The state was trying to follow the path of the least resistance." But from the state's perspective, the site near Afton was chosen because it was the most environmentally suitable. "We looked at 93 sites in 13 counties, and considered several factors in making a decision, such as the soil characteristics of the area and the population density-the site that would affect the least amount of people," said Bill Meyer, director of the Division of Waste Management for North Carolina's Department of Environ- ment, Health, and Natural Resources. Public concern about the landfill turned into organized protest in September of 1982, and the environ- mental justice movement advanced to a national level. Led by leading civil rights groups, all kinds of people-Whites, African Americans, Hispanics, Asians, and Native Americans-participated in six weeks of protests that involved marching and blocking the roads to the landfill. The protests resulted in more than 550 arrests, attracting the attention of the national media and Congress. At the request of Walter Fauntroy, former District of Columbia delegate and then chairman of the Congres- sional Black Caucus, the U.S. General Accounting Office conducted an investigation in 1983 that confirmed a suspected pattern. Three out of four disposal sites in the Southeastern United States were located in mostly poor, African American communities. "When community members don't have political and economic resources, it makes it harder to fight back." Despite the protests in Warren County, the landfill was completed, which came as no surprise to residents. "We knew the trucks would be rolling in," said Deborah Ferruccio, Ken's wife. "We blocked those roads to make a point, and to make the state think twice about putting other dumps here." It marked the first time people were arrested over the siting of a landfill. ( contd. on next page) (contd. from previous page) "It's a gross injustice any time a toxic waste facility is put in a community that is already destitute," according to Dollie Burwell. She has lived four miles from the landfill since 1972 and also had a major role in the protests. "Not only do we wonder about our health," she said, "but the landfill has had a negative impact on the value of our land." Many people have worked hard to cultivate land, only to find that the landfill has devalued their property. That kind of blow can be devastating. Often overlooked is the psychologi- cal impact of living near a toxic waste landfill. Ms. Burwell's daughter, Kim, who was 10 years old at the time of the protests, wouldn't go out for recess at school because she was frightened; she had heard a rumor that breathing the air could kill her instantaneously. The drinking water was also an issue. Many children at South Warren Elementary School didn't want to drink the water for fear of the PCBs. "Even now, when Kim comes here to visit, she won't drink the water," Ms. Burwell said. Both Mr. Kearney and the Ferruccios have recently spent at least $5,000 on water filters because they wonder about the safety of their drinking water. "I don't know for sure that the filtering helps, but it makes me feel better," Mr. Kearney said. "I do it because those PCBs are poisonous." And while worrying about the water is understandable, there is no direct evidence that the drinking water in the area around the landfill is contaminated with PCBs, according to Joel Hirschhorn, independent science advisor to the Joint Warren County/ State PCB Landfill Working Group, of which Ms. Burwell serves as co-chair. "Of more concern is contamina- tion in the air and soil," said Dr. Hirschhorn, who believes the landfill is leaking. "We have hard evidence that there are cracks in the top liner of the landfill, which is why it's not surprising that we've found PCB air emissions." The PCB Landfill Working Group, made up of local citizens and local and state officials, recently contacted Region 4 of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), charging that the landfill does not comply with federal regula- tions. Closing the Gap POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS (PCBs) PCBs rank sixth on the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR)/ Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) list of top 20 hazardous substances. In the past, PCBs were widely used as coolants, insulating materials, and lubricants in electrical equipment such as transformers. The United States stopped making the toxic chemicals in 1977 because of health effects associated with exposure. Routes of exposure to PCBs include drinking water, contaminated food such as fish, and skin contact to soil and air. It is widely accepted that PCBs resistance to decomposition in soil and water threatens wildlife. According to ATSDR, repeated skin contact to PCBs in rabbits caused liver, kidney, and skin damage; a single large exposure to skin caused death in rabbits. PCBs' effects on humans, however, are not clear. PCBs are among those substances that are probable carcinogens based on animal experiments, according to the American Cancer Society. We cannot definitively say that PCBs cause cancer, said Bailus Walker, professor of environmental medicine and associate director of Howard University's Cancer Center in Washington, D.C. "Some PCBs may be a risk factor for cancer." Alleged violations pertain to ground- water monitoring and leachate management. According to EPA, there is 10 to 15 feet of standing water in the landfill, which is unacceptable because of the potential for that water to be released into the environment. "The county is in a vulnerable position," Ms. Burwell said, "because the liner could break away at any moment." This could be a dangerous occurrence if the water is contaminated. EPA is requiring that the state upgrade the landfill's leachate removal system. The agency is also conducting its own investigation on whether the landfill is leaking. According to Craig Brown, an environmental engineer with EPA, "Monitoring data so far is insufficient to determine if the landfill is releasing toxic substances to the environment." Both EPA and the state of North Carolina maintained that the landfill is "relatively safe." But Dr. Hirschhorn has another opinion. He called the landfill "an unsafe situation." How unsafe, he added, is a tough question. "In addition to PCBs, we have found Dioxins in a couple of monitoring wells near the landfill." Dioxins are chemicals viewed as even more toxic thanPCBs. In Dr. Hirschhorn's view, there are a couple of choices in this scenario. The state can use technology to detoxify the landfill completely and make it safe, which is what the Working Group is pushing for. There are technologies today that did not exist before. Or the state can take a cheaper route, making 2 some repairs such as putting in a new top liner or pumping the water out. Bill Meyer said his team at North Carolina's division of waste manage- ment is committed to doing both: "We plan to make the repairs and we are also working on selecting a feasible technology to detoxify the landfill," he said. "We are getting cost estimates, and expect it will cost between 20 to 30 million dollars to detoxify the landfill. Then we'll go to the General Assembly to request the funds." Whether the state legislature will appropriate funds is hard to tell. "Detoxifying is an expensive proposition," Dr. Hirschhorn said. "But it's worth it to the people who live there." Ms. Bobbi Riley doesn't plan to wait and see what the state's next move will be. She has lived two miles from the landfill for eight years, and her family has decided to risk the financial loss and move to another county. "I worry about all the times I told my kids to go outside and get some fresh air," she said. "The chance that my family's health is in danger is a chance I'm not willing to take." Moving is the right choice for Riley's family, but not everyone near the landfill can afford to make or even wants to make that choice. Mr. Kearney, for example, has family ties to Warren County. . "I was born here and own 35 acres ofland in this area," he said. "I can't just pick up and leave. This is my home." 7he PCBLandfdl 1-¼rking Group canbereachedat919-257-1948. --by Michelle Meadows Minority Health Perspect ive Environmental Equity: Colleges and Universities C,an Help by Bai/us Walker,jr.,PhD,MPH . . Associate Director, Cancer Center at Howard U ruversity Medical Center, and professor of environmental and occupational medicine Environmental policies have impro-:ed steadil~ and substantially in the United States smce Amencans celebrated their first Earth Day in 1970 to demonstrate their growing concerns about the environme?t. ~ut g~graphic areas inhabited chiefly by racial and ethnic mmonty groups are still more likely than mostly White areas to experience serious air, water, and soil pollution from industries such as oil refineries and chemical plants. Low-income and minority communities also are more likely to house waste treatment facilities, incinerators, and toxic-waste dumps. And children in minority communities face a higher-than-average risk oflead poisoning because of lead-based paint in their homes. The realization that people of color, as well as other low- income groups, are exposed to more environmental pollu- tion than are Whites has added the concept of "environmen- tal equity" to the modern environmental movement. Yet most colleges and universities, especially those in urban areas and near communities suffering the effects of pollutants, can do more to help combat environmental inequities. They can do more through intensified research and greater involvement in regional development that promotes environ~ental_ equity. Academic institutions can be particularly useful m fmding new solutions to environmental inequities, because the most likely soldiers in this war-the federal government and many environmental groups-are viewed with suspicion by many Blacks and Hispanics. Some critics believe the federal government enforces environmental laws less stringently in Black communities than in predominantly White neighborhoods. A National Law Journal report a few years ago supported this view. The report pulled together census data, dockets of court cases involving the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and EPA's record of cleaning up hazardous waste sites. And many Black and Hispanic leaders have long felt that mainstream organizations appear more concerned with plant and animal habitats than with conditions in urban centers. Some leaders of the environmental equity movement argue that "the environmental movement itself is respon- sible for much of the inequity," as pointed out in Environmen- talism at the Crossroads, a book by Jonathan Adler, directorof environmental studies at the Washington-based Competitive Enterprise Institute. OCTOBER 1997 3 These critics charge that environmentalists have devoted their energies to making life in the mostly White suburbs better by concentrating on issues such as reducing noise from airliners, protecting bird populations, preserving grasslands and forests in the suburbs, and improving public transporta- tion to reduce pollution from cars. Where they have suc- ceeded, the result has been to draw investments, jobs, and residents away from inner cities, making life there bleaker. To be fair, environmentalists are now paying more attention to the problems of minority communities that are exposed to high concentrations of toxic pollutants, following two decades of complaints from residents in areas such as Louisiana's "Cancer Alley," an area between Baton Rouge and New Orleans that is home to a huge cluster of chemical plants and oil refineries. Residents there contend that cancer and many other diseases affect disproportionate numbers of low-income, minority residents in the area. Although members of minority groups believe that environmental activists are paying more attention to their concerns now, they do not think that the environmentalists' usual response-to push federal agencies-is enough. Critics do not trust the government to give them accurate informa- tion about, or to protect them from, environmental dangers. In the face of this alienation, federal and state programs must leap a substantial credibility gap before they can begin to operate effectively. Suspicions of federal and local government programs seem understandable in the face of many documented instances of such practices as the "targeting" of Black communities as sites for new hazardous waste facilities. In 1990, for example, Robert Bullard, professor of sociology and head of the Environmental Justice Resource Center at Clark Atlanta University, found that six of the eight waste- disposal incinerators in the city of Houston were located in Black neighborhoods. And last September, Brent Staples, a member of the editorial board with The New York Times, reported on environmental conditions in Chester, Pa., a mainly Black city of approximately 30,000 located south of Philadelphi~ .. I:Ie found that Chester contained five hazardous waste facilities, compared with two in the rest of Delaware County, which is overwhelmingly White. The Chester plants process more than two million tons of waste per year; the other two plants handle less than one percent of that amount. Facilities in Chester also treat most of the county's raw sewage. Because of the concentration of such facilities, Chester accounts for 75 percent of the county's air pollution complaints. Clearly, issues of environmental inequity are not solely ecological, environmental, or health-related. They are also social, economic, and political. We cannot address one facet of the problem at a time. contd. on page 9 Closing the Gap EPA's Office of Environmental Justice All the things people don't want in their backyards are in the backyards of minority populations and those who are disadvantaged, said Clarice Gaylord, PhD, director of the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) Office of Environmental Justice. In response to public concern, EPA formed the Office of Environ- mental Equity Qater changed to the Office of Environmental Justice) in 1992. EPA defines environmental justice as fair treatment and equal protection under environmental laws to ensure that all people, regardless of race, culture, or income level, live in clean, safe, and sustainable communi- ties. The office initially focused on environmental justice outreach and education. This involved empowering residents of minority and low-income communities to understand their rights and responsibilities under environmen- tal laws and to become involved in environmental decision-making. "We wanted citizens to know that they can become members of siting boards and learn how to access information about the health impact of environmental changes in their communities," Dr. Gaylord said. To ensure community participa- tion in its plans, EPA established the National Environmental Justice Advisory Council (NEJAC) in 1993. The council represents an opportunity for community, industry, and state and local governments to come together and tackle environmental justice problems. In addition to having members from key environmental justice constituencies, NEJAC has subcom- mittees to help develop strategic plans forthe agency. The original subcommittees covered public participation and accountability; health and research; enforcement; and waste and facility siting. Two more subcommittees were added: indigenous peoples and international affairs. Closing the Gap NEJAC's accomplishments include conducting public dialogue meetings in major cities. A significant event forthe Office of Environmental Justice, Dr. Gaylord said, was that in 1993 EPA Administra- tor Carol Browner made environmental justice an agency priority. "Our office became a national program office, and we expanded our focus to address many issues, in addition to outreach and education," Dr. Gaylord said. For example, the office was able to investigate environ- mental justice data collection and analysis, as well as the health effects of environmental hazards. Another boost to environmental justice came in 1994 when President Clinton issued Executive Order 12898 to establish environmental justice as a national priority. The Executive Order, titled "Federal Actions to Address Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations," marked the first Presidential effort to direct all federal agencies with a public health or environmental mission to incorporate environmental justice strategies in their act1v1t1es. "Changes in environmental justice are slow in coming," but there have been some successes, Dr. Gaylord said. As a result of a relocation roundtable held with community members at the end of 1996, EPA is in the process of moving 358 members of an African American community away from a hazardous waste site, Dr. Gaylord said. "EPA has relocated eight communities in the past, but this is the first time the agency will have ever relocated an African American community. We are looking closely at our national reloca- tion policy." The main goals for the Office of Environmental Justice now, Dr. Gaylord said, are to continue increasing public involvement in the office's strategies. fur more information, call the 0/fu:e of Environmental justice at 202-564-2515. --M.M. 4 Some of the Major Events: Environmental Justice Movement 1971: Council of Environmental Quality annual report acknowledges racial discrimination adversely affects environ- ment of urban poor people. 1979: Robert Bullard, now at the Environmental Justice Resource Center at Clark Atlanta University, studies an affluent African American community's attempt to block the siting of a landfill in Houston. 1982: Citizens in Warren County, North Carolina protest PCB landfill. 1983: General Accounting Office report states that 3 out of 4 hazardous waste facilities in EPA's Region 4 are in African American communities. 1987: United Church of Christ (UCC) Commission for Racial Justice issues report called Toxic !Vizste and Race in the United States, which states that though socioeconomic factors play a role in the siting of toxic waste facilities, race is the major factor. 1990: Conference at the University of Michigan releases report called Race and the Incidence of Environmental Hazards. Bullard publishes Dumping in Dixie, recognized as the first textbook on environmental justice. 1991: First National People of Color Leadership Summit in Washington, D.C. adopts the Principles of Environmental justice. 1992: EPA releases Environmental Equity: Reducing Risk/or All Communities, and establishes Office of Environmental Justice. 1993: EPA establishes the National Environmental Justice Advisory Council, and Browner makes environmental justice an EPA priority. 1994: Federal agencies, including the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, NIH, hold symposium on environmental justice. President Clinton issues Executive Order 12898, andlnteragency Working Group on Environmental Justice is established. UCC issues Toxic Waste and Race Revisited, strengthening the link between race and waste facilities. Misuse of Methyl Parathion Earlier this ye'.11", the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (A TSDR) and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issued a national alert to warn the public about the illegal use of methyl parathion, an agricul- tural insecticide approved only for outdoor use. "There has been an emerging pattern of the illegal sale of the pesticide for indoor use," said Pam Tucker, MD, chief of ATSDR's Health Promotion Branch. "But when used at high doses in homes to kill roaches and other indoor insects the insecticide can cause serious health problems for people ' and pets. Severe exposure can be fatal." In a recent case, unlicensed pest control operators illegally sprayed many houses and other buildings in Jackson County, Mississippi. Residents reported flu-like symptoms, head- aches, and diarrhea that could be consistent with low-dose exposure_-In response EPA took emergency action, relocating 1,416 residents from 365 homes. Eight day care centers, one restaurant and two hotels have been closed. Several people have been arrested and criminally charged with misuse and illegal sale of the pesticide. According to ATSDR's latest update of the methyl parathion contamination problem, similar incidents have occured in at least eight other states: Alabama, Louisiana, Tenne_sse~, Arkansas, Illinois, and Texas, Ohio, and Michigan. Most mcidents have affected a cross section of people, and others have affected mostly African American communities. EPA and ATSDR have adopted a common procedure to respond to the emergencies. The agencies advise that if you hire someone to treat your home for a pest problem, ask to see that person's certification. It is also important to ask for the brand name of the pesticide and the name of the product's active ingredient. Methyl Parathion has been marketed under the names: Nitrox; Penncap-M; Dithon 63; Ketokil 52; Seis-Tres 6-3; Metaspray SE; andParaspray 6-3. ATSDR's Emergency Response Hotline number is 404-639-0615. Nominations Sought for Carcinogen Report: The National Toxicology Program, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, has invited the public to ~ominate ~ubstanc:s or mixtures to be evaluated for listing m the National Toxicology Program's Biennial Report on Carcinogens. The report lists substances "known to be hu~'.111 carcinogens," and a much larger group "reasonably anticipated to be human carcinogens." There is no deadline. Nominations may be made by consumers, individual workers, businesses or others. Nominations should include copies or references to relevant data that have appeared in journals or other reports about the substance's carcinogenic potential, and about the extent of exposure. Send nominations to: 1he NIP, Biennial Report on Carcinogens, Mail Drop WC-05, PO &x 12233, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 2 7709. OCTOBER 1997 5 Community Involvement in Hazardous Waste Issues There are hazardous waste sites all over this country, and communities in the surrounding areas are often faced with incomplete information about health risks. Some community members feel that researchers come in to investigate the site, but then they don't share or explain their research findings. The Boston University School of Public Health and the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) recently released a new report called Learning.from Success: HealthAgencyEjfortstolmproveO»nmunitylnvolvementin CommunitiesAjfectedbyHa-zardous Waste Sites. The report offers recommendations to encourage positive interactions between communities and public health agencies. One example is the case of the Akwesasne Mohawk Nation, which uses the rivers near the General Motors Central Foundry Division in Massena, New York. PCBs were used and disposed of on the site from 1938 to 1973, causing contamination to the nearby water bodies such as the St. Lawrence River. Toxic contamination from the site, which was placed on EPA's National Priorities List in 1983, has threatened the community's health, as well as its socioeconomic and cultural base. In response, the Akwesasne Task Force on the Environ- ment (A TFE) formed as a community-based organization. When outside researchers came into the community, the task for~e established a research advisory committee to guide environmental research in the area. The A TFE became incorporated so it could apply for research grants and have control over the use of data. The community took the initiative to partner with the New York Department of Health and the State University of New York to conduct studies. One study has revealed that mothers have been exposed to PCBs by eating local fish, and the contamina- tion was passed to their infants through breast milk. Another study is exploring the effects of PCBs on the physical and cognitive abilities of adolescents. Research agreements to ensure that studies are in sync :"'ith community needs have been key. In addition to helping mvolve the community in the research process, A TFE initiated cultural sensitivity training for researchers, and organized presentations that explain the research to the community. . The stu~y concludes that "by recognizing and anticipat- mg commumty needs and by actively soliciting community concerns and input, agencies could do a great deal to eliminate rancor, controversy, and adverse publicity, and deliver services that better meet the health-related needs of communities at a lower cost." This report includes studies of activities on 11 hazardous waste sites. To request a co/7)1, callATSDR's Division a/Health Education and Promotion, 404-639-6204; Fax 404-639-6207. --Michelle Meadows Closing the Gap NIAID Supports National Inner-City Asthma Study t""f1he first phase of the 1 National Cooperative Inner-City Asthma Study (NCICAS) recently made headlines with a surprising discovery. The combination of cock- roach allergy and exposure to the insects is an important cause of asthma-related illness and hospital- ization among children living in U.S. inner-city areas. Asthma is a chronic, inflammatory lung disease characterized by recurrent breath- ing problems. The study, which focused on African American and Hispanic children, was funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health. The study is part of an effort to combat the dangerous rise in asthma-related illnesses and mortality rates among inner-city children. The results of Phase I of the NCICAS were reported in the May 8, 1997, issue of the New England Journal a/Medicine. The study included 1,528 children from several cities, including New York, Washington, D.C., Baltimore, and Chicago. All of the children came from households that were below the 1990 poverty level and had been diagnosed with asthma by a physician. The children were given skin tests for hypersensitivity for several allergens including dust mites, cat dander, and cockroaches. Mea- surements of these allergens were also taken from household dusts in the children's bedrooms. Closing the Gap Results showed that 36.8 percent of the children were allergic to cockroach allergen, compared to the 34.9 and 22.7 percent respec- tively, from dust mites and cat dander. The bedroom tests showed that 50.2 percent of the rooms had high levels of cockroach allergen, compared to 9.7 percent and 12.6 percent for dust mites and cat dander. Children who were both allergic to cockroaches and exposed to high cockroach allergen levels missed school more often than others, and needed twice as many unscheduled asthma-related medical visits. Phase II of the NCICAS studied the effectiveness of a program to develop knowledge about asthma, promote self- management skills, and manage exposure to environmental factors associated with asthma. NIAID supports research and developments in understanding how asthma impacts all popula- tions, but recent emphasis has been placed on minority populations because of asthma's dispropor- tionate impact on minorities. For example, African American children are three to four times more likely than White children to be hospitalized for asthma, and four to six times more likely to die from asthma. More information about NIAID's work on asthma can be found at its web site: http:/ /www.naiad.nih.gov The NCICAS has produced A Guide for Helping Oiildren With Asthma. To request a capy, call NIAID at 301-496-5717. --Marisa Urgo 6 The National Asthma Education and Prevention Program (NAEPP), part of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, works to increase public awareness of asthma as a public health problem; to improve patient knowledge of asthma detection and treatment, especially in high-risk populations; and to define guidelines for asthma education programs. NAEPP sponsored the first national conference on asthma management in 1992, and NAEPP produced a report in 1995 on asthma management in minority children. An NAEPP coordinating committee of several health organizations and agencies provides input on program strategies and shares information on asthma-related activities. For example, The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Center for Environmental Health (NCEH) is carrying out a project called "Identifica- tion and Prevention of Exposure to Air Pollutants and Other Environmen- tal Detriments of Asthma Among Minority Children in Urban Areas." See page 10 for more on NCEH 1he National Asthma Education and ~Program pravidesmaterialson asthma for patients and professionals. Calf 301-251-1222. Closing the Gap is published by the Office of Minority Health Resource Center, a service of OMH. To request additional copies of the newsletter, call 1-800-444-6472. http:/ /www.omhrc.gov Executive Editor Blake Crawford Managing Editor Michelle Meadows Writers Jean Oxendine Marisa Urgo Production Coordinator Rebecca Hardaway Giving a Voice to AAPI Communities "\V [hen the Asian Pacific Environmental Network W (APEN) opened its doors in Oakland, California in 1993, it set out to give Asian American and Pacific Islander American (AAPn communities a voice in the area of environmental issues. According to Peggy Saika, executive director of APEN, the organization's approach balances economic development, social justice, and environmental protection-issues that have historically been seen as separate. "Mainstream environmental activists have developed agendas that focus on wilderness and wildlife preservation, resource management, pollution abatement, and population control," said Ms. Saika. "But many activists of color have also been engaged in empowerment struggles regarding employment, housing, education, and health care." To assess community needs and determine priority areas, APEN conducted an evaluation of the Asian and Pacific Islander population in the six Bay area counties. This involved accumulating demographic data, meeting with community leaders, and exploring opportunities for collabo- ration. "Where we work, where we live, where our kids go to school, and where we play all define our environmental issues." The results of the needs assessment revealed several points that have guided APEN in its work. For example, there was a need to conduct bilingual and culturally accessible education about environmental hazards. In one instance, health officials in California issued an advisory against eating Bay fish more than twice a month because the fish are so contaminated with PCBs, mercury, dioxin, and pesticides. Laotians in that area, however, generally eat more than two Bay fish per month. According to APEN, it is not enough to tell people to stop feeding fish to their families. "An en:vironmental justice agenda demands a more long-term approach," Ms. Saika said. APEN contracted with a Laotian woman to help organize community meetings that would discuss effective ways to help the Laotian community learn about the fishing regula- tions and advisories, as well as the reasoning behind them. In addition to the fish education project, APEN has initiated other campaigns such as one that educates the public about lead in Asian dish ware, and one that empowers community members who live near toxic waste sites to learn about the management of the sites. The network is also conducting a long-term study on the effect of dioxins in seafood. APEN's projects reflect the organization's understanding that environmental justice covers a spectrum of issues, Ms. Saika said. "Where we work, where we live, where our kids go to school, and where we play all define our environmental issues." For more informatwn about the Asian Pacific Erwi:ronmen- tal Network, call 510-834-8920. OCTOBER 1997 --Michelle Meadows 7 CDC Proposes New Lead Screening Guidelines Lead blood levels for Americans have declined dramatically, but some children continue to be at risk of lead exposure, according to recent reports from the Centers for Disease Prevention and Control (CDC). Lead exposure in young children is of particular concern because children absorb lead more readily than adults, and a child's developing nervous system is particularly vulnerable to lead's effects. Recent declines in blood lead levels are believed to be the result of removal of lead from gasoline, as well as from other sources such as household paint, food and drink cans, and plumbing systems. But blood lead levels remain high among children in low-income families, especially those living in older housing where lead paint may have been used. More that one-fifth of non-Hispanic African American children living in older homes have elevated blood lead levels. To reach children at risk, CDC is proposing an updated lead screening guidance to be used by state and local health officials. The guidelines recommend that health officials determine appropriate screening policies by targeting their efforts at children who live in older homes and children from low-income families. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development estimates that approximately 4 million homes where young children live contain lead-based paint hazards "The new guidance does not change CDC's position on the adverse health effects caused by lead," said CDC director Dr. David Satcher. "Instead, we want to increase screening and follow-up care for those children who are at risk. The best way to do this is through state and local public health officials." 1hedraft of the new guidance is awilable by calling 1-888-232-6789. The National Lead Information Center has new bilingual Web pages on its site. There is an English and Spanish document order form and new links to Spanish-language web sites with information on lead-related issues. The address is http:/ /www.nsc.org/ ehc/leadspan.htm The National Lead Information Center is part of the Environmental Health Safety Center, a division of the National Safety Council. The center publishes a free newsletter called Lead Inform. Funding for the center is provided by CDC, EPA, and HUD. Call 1-800-424-LEAD. Closing the Gap Mi~t Farmworkers Suffer from Pesticide Exposure Migrant farmworkers are one of the most underserved and understudied occupational populations in the United States, despite the fact that they work in one of the most hazardous occupations. The World Resources Institute has estimated that as many as 313,000 farm workers in the U.S. may suffer from pesticide-related illnesses each year. About 800 to 1,000 farm workers die each year as a direct consequence of pesticide exposure. Eighty-five percent of the migrant and seasonal farmworkers in the U.S. are minorities. The majority are Mexicans, followed by Puerto Ricans, Carribean Blacks, and African Ameri- cans. Pesticides are defined as any poison used to destroy pests. Ex- amples of pesticides include insecti- cides, fungicides, rodenticides, and herbicides. Agricultural workers can absorb pesticides through their skin, through inhalation, and by ingestion. Spraying with pesticides while workers are in the field is not uncommon. The exposure can result in serious health problems, including acute systematic poisoning-abdominal pain, nausea, dizziness, vomiting, headaches, Services of the National Center for Farmworker Health (NCFH) Migrant Health Resource Center: The center collects and distributes materials to serve the information needs of migrant health centers. Services include a job bank and a resume bank. 512-328-7682 Call for Health Project: This project operates a toll-free telephone line to provide migrant farmworkers with health information and referral services. 1-800-377-9968 Closing the Gap and skin or eye problems. Chronic health problems may include chronic dermatitis, fatigue, sleep disturbances, anxiety, memory problems, different kinds of cancers, and birth defects. The National Center for Farmworker Health (NCFH) is one organization that works to break down the barriers to safe and healthy living for farmworkers. Core funding for NCFH comes from the Health Resources and Services Administration, Bureau of Primary Health Care, Migrant Health Branch. The center also receives funding from other agencies including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institute of Occupational Health and Safety. According to NCFH, poverty, frequent mobility, low literacy, and language and cultural barriers can impede farmworkers' access to social services and other cost-effective pnmary care. Economic pressures make farm workers reluctant to miss work, and they are not protected by sick leave. These circumstances cause them to postpone seeking health care, and rely on expensive emergency room care. With a grant from the Environ- Fannworker News: This newsletter provides farmworkers information on how to protect their health. Technical assistance: The center offers migrant-specific assistance and consultation to organizations on policy and administrative issues, funding resources, grant writing, and specific farmworker initiatives. Migrant Clinicians Network: NCFH collaborates with this network of clinical professionals who provide health and human services to farmworkers. 512-328-7682 8 mental Protection Agency (EPA), NCHF runs a "train the trainer" program. Prospective trainers have included union members, migrant education specialists, and community liaisons-those who have a direct link to the farmworkers. The program instructs participants on the possible risks associated with exposure to pesticides, and provides guidance on delivering effective presentations, using audiovisual aids, developing lesson plans, and creating effective learning environments. "In orderto meet the needs of the people being trained, we conduct the trainings in the areas where migrant farmworkers reside," said Linda Lopez, RN, a former health education consultant for NCFH who runs the training program. Ten trainings have taken place in various parts of the country. "There are 11 critical points that all training programs need to include as mandated by EPA," Lopez said. "But each state may have specific regulations regarding the certification process and follow-up activities." Though there is no formal mechanism for measuring the long- term benefits of the program, the best indicator of the number of workers trained is the growing number of educational booklets that have been supplied to trainers. The booklets, provided by EPA, are available in English and Spanish. "We have conducted some of our training programs in Spanish so that language is not a barrier to the success of the program," Ms. Lopez said. Based in Austin, Texas, NCFH has worked to improve the health of farmworkers and their families since 1975. For more information, call 512- 328-7682; Web: http:/ /www.ncfh.org --Jean Oxendine Expansion of Brownfields Initiative O n May 13, 1997, Vice President Gore announced that he was bringing together resources of more than 15 federal agencies as part of the Clinton Administration's new "Brownfields National Partnership." The partnership builds on the Administration's actions to empower and revitalize America's communities. This expanded effort includes commitments from across the federal government and the private sector to help thousands of communities clean up and redevelop Brownfields--abandoned pieces ofland, usually in inner cities, that are contaminated from previous industrial use. An example of a successfully redeveloped Brownfields site is Eugenio Maria de Hostos Community College in South Bronx, New York. The college used to be an aban- doned tire factory. In addition to announcing the national partnership, the Vice President and senior Administration officials announced a new round of Brownfields project grants and a call to Congress to pass the President's Brownfields legislative package. The Brownfields Partnership, which includes a $300 million Federal investment in Brownfields cleanup, is expected to leverage from $5 billion to $28 billion in private investment, support up to 196,000 jobs, and protect up to 34,000 acres of undeveloped "greenfield" areas. The Administration launched the Brownfields initiative in November 1993 with a $200,000 grant from the Environ- mental Protection Agency (EPA) to Cleveland, Ohio, so that state and local officials could help create a model for redevel- oping these areas across the country. In 1995, EPA cosponsored a series of public hearings on Urban Revitalization and Brownfields. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) was one of several federal agencies participating in these hearings. Residents of impacted communities were able to help shape the initiative. For the new Brownfields partnership, HHS is commit- ting $500,000, and leading an Administration-wide effort to develop a public health policy for Brownfields that will protect community residents. "Brownfields '97", a national conference, took place on September 3-5 in Kansas City, Missouri. The forum brought together key experts from all levels of government, business, finance, and local communities. For more information on the Brownfields National Partnership Agenda, call 1-800424-9346. Web: www.epa.gov/brownfields OCTOBER 1997 9 contd from p:t,~ 3 (Colleges and Universities Can Help} A key need in finding remedies is more medical research on the epidemiology of environmentally-provoked disease and dysfunction, such as learning difficulties related to lead poisoning among racial minorities. We also need to devote more money to programs that increase the number of minority students pursuing careers in environmental science, as well as to such efforts as the National Library of Medicine's program to strengthen environmental teaching and research at historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs.) Florida A & MU niversity provides an example of what can be done. The university has worked with the National Library of Medicine to develop a multidisciplinary program in environmental health that emphasizes preventing pollution and enhancing equity. The program's goal is to make environmental awareness an integral part of the university's curricula in the physical and biological sciences. Meharry Medical College is another good example; experts there are studying environmental conditions in Black communities in the Mississippi delta, which has a high concentration of polluting facilities. Since 1990, the Energy Department has assisted a consortium of HBCUs with expanding environmental courses, setting up outreach programs in communities, and developing technologies to manage and dispose of hazard- ous and radioactive wastes safely. Federal grants from EPA have also helped some universities in the consortium develop research centers to work with affected communities. Experts at these institutions have learned that environ- mental inequity may result from haphazard land-use decisions and zoning that designates parcels of land for industry without providing adequate buffer zones for nearby working-class residences. University researchers can help by posing questions for local debate and by helping negotiate resolutions to disputes over land use and the location of pollution-producing facilities. In urban centers, poor people have little political clout, so broad coalitions of concerned individuals and groups must be fashioned. Universities can supply faculty experts and convene local groups. Scholars need to go beyond evaluation to communica- tion-talking with neighborhood groups, issuing reports and press releases, condensing research findings into easy-to- understand fact sheets, and testifying before legislative bodies. And we can do a better job of teaching students about the close links between environmental justice and social and economic 1Ssues. Those of us with expertise in the medical, social, and economic dimensions of environmental problems owe it to our fellow citizens to use that knowledge to halt environmen- tal inequities. --Adapted and reprinted from the Chronicle of Higher Education Closing the Gap UpdateonIHS Sanitation Facilities Initiative Safe and adequate water supply and waste disposal systems are essential to the health of American Indian and Alaska Native communities. The Sanitation Facilities Initiative of the Indian Health Service (IHS) focuses on expanding services to existing Indian homes, and then to new and renovated homes. According to the annual sanitation facilities estimate for fiscal year 1997, approximately 47,492 American Indian/ Alaska Native homes lack a safe water supply or adequate sewage disposal system or both, said Richard Barror, PhD, chief of the IHS Sanita- tion Facilities Construction Program. "IHS has identified a backlog of 2,400 needed sanitation facilities construction projects costing $1.53 billion to provide all American Indians and Alaska Natives with safe drinking water and adequate sewage disposal," he said. The President's FY97 budget proposal includes an additional $29 million to help reduce the backlog of sanitation deficiencies. IHS is seeking supplemental funds from non-IHS sources. According to IHS, families with satisfactory environmental conditions in their homes require 75 percent fewer medical services. Tribal governments have worked in partnership with the IHS Sanitation Facilities Construction Program since the passage of the Indian Sanitation Facilities Act in 1959. Congress reaffirmed its support through the Indian Health Care Amendments of 1988. In accordance with the requirements of the amend- ments, IHS developed a 10-year funding plan for this initiative. For more information, contact Dr. Barrorat 301-443-1046. Closing the Gap Mercury Poisoning Project Addresses Magico-Religious Uses Dr. Arnold Wendroff of the Mercury Poisoning Project in Brooklyn, New York, has been working to alert health authorities about traditional practices involving mercury. "Mercury is widely used by several Hispanic and Caribbean ethnic groups for magico-religious purposes," Dr. Wendroff said. People obtain the mercury from shops called botanicas, which sell mercury illegally. Traditional uses of mercury include placing it in candles or sprin- kling it on floors. According to the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, mercury is a naturally occuring element that appears as a silvery liquid. It volatizes easily into the air as odorless, colorless vapors that are highly toxic and can be deadly. Behaviors and attitudes regarding environmental risks vary among ethnic groups, Dr. Wendroff said, and it's not clear whether people are unaware of mercury's toxic nature or whetherthey ignore the health risks because of cultural norms. For more information about the Mercury Poisoning Project, call Dr. Wendroff at 718-499-8336. CDC's National Center for Environmental Health N CEH carries out applied research, disseminates guidelines and recom- mendations on environmental health, and assists state and local health agencies on environmental issues. The center has divisions on birth defects and disabilities; environmental hazards and health effects; and environmental health laboratory sciences; as well as programs on refugee health and emergency response coordinations. NCEH is especially interested in children and people who are often overlooked in public health. Contact: NCEH at 770-488-7030. Web: http:/ /www.cdc.gov/nceh 1 0 Funding Opportunities EPA sponsors the Environmental Justice Small Grants Program to provide financial assistance to commu- nity groups that would like to carry out environmental justice projects. Community-based organizations, churches, and federally-recognized tribal governments are eligible to apply. To be placed on the national mailing list to receive information on the FYl 998 Environmental Justice Small Grants, send your name, organization, address, and phone number to: EPA, Office of Environmental Justice Small Grants Program (2201A), FY 1998 Grants Mailing List, 401 M St., SW, Washing- ton, DC 20460. The Environmental Support Center, a non-profit organization in Washing- ton, D.C., is accepting applications from local, state, or regional organiza- tions looking for training and technical assistance funds for environmental projects. Organizations serving low- income or minority constituencies are encouraged to apply. The deadline is open. Call 202-966-9834 for more information. Or visit the web site: http:/www.envsc.org Electric and Magnetic Fields Clearinghouse The Environmental Health Clearing- house of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences is now called the Electric and Magnetic Fields Clearinghouse. The center focuses on providing information about the health effects of residential exposure to electric and magnetic fields, such as power lines and appliances. A Spanish- language version of the document QuestionsandAnswersonEMFis available. Call the clearinghouse at 1-800-64 3-4 794. NIEHS Trains Young Adults The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), National Institutes of Health, operates the Superfund Worker Education and Training Program. This program provides funds to non-profit organizations that develop and deliver training to workers who are involved in handling hazardous waste or in respond- ing to emergencies relating to hazardous materials. The Laborers' ACG Education and Training Fund (Laborers-A CG) is one project that focuses on American Indian/ Alaska Native populations. The project has provided training on hazardous waste and asbestos abatement to members of more than 15 different tribes, including the Navajo, Sioux, Omaha, and Winnebago Nations. NIEHS provides this training program under the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986. A 1991 reauthorization of the Superfund Program extended the NIEHS training program for an additional three-year period, and allotted $20 million per year for the program. This support helped expands the scope of the NIEHS program to include workers involved in the cleaning up nuclear weapons facilities. The program now has additional funding from the U.S. Department of Energy for this purpose. More than 24,000 courses have been delivered through the program, and more than 500,000 workers have received training. In 1995 the NIEHS Training Program received funding from Congress for a pilot project called the Minority Worker Training Program (MWTP). This program recruits and trains young adults living near hazardous waste sites or in other contaminated areas for careers in the environmental restoration industry. For Fiscal Year 1998, the program's funding level is $3 million. "The rationale for MWTP is that in urban areas, benefits of clean up programs have not been reaching the commu- nity," according to Sharon Beard, an industrial hygienist with the program. "It is important for residents to become involved in cleaning up their communities." More than 360 students aged 18 to 25 have been trained through MWTP, Ms. Beard said. And more than 200 have been placed in jobs. Salaries range from $9 to $25 per hour. The one-year training cycles cover life skills, interview techniques, as well as skills in math, science, and health and safety related to construction work. "One of our main goals," Ms. Beard said, "is to enhance participants' problem-solving skills, their self esteem, and their ability to work together in applying technical knowledge to environmental problems." For more information about these training programs, call NIEHS at 919-541-1863. Web: http:/ /www.niehs.nih.gov/wetp/home.htm --Jean Oxendine OCTOBER 1997 1 1 Environmental Justice Resource Center The Environmental Justice Resource Center (EJRC) at Clark Atlanta University addresses many environmental issues of concern to minority populations. Programs include the development of information systems to access environmen- tal databases, and the development of community-based research workshops. The center's activities include building patnerships with government agencies, corporations, and community-based organizations. EJRC distributes several publications, including 1he People of Color Environmental Groups Directory, 1994-1995; and Environmental justice and Transportation: Building Model Partnerships Gmference Proceedings, 1996. For more information on EJRC, call 404-880-6911. Or, write to EJRC, Clark Atlanta University, Box 141, 223 James P. Brawley Drive, SW, Atlanta, GA 30314; Web: http:// www.ejrc.cau.edu Indoor Air Quality Information Clearinghouse This clearinghouse provides information on the health effects of pollutants, standards and guidelines related to indoor air quality, and information on federal and state legislation. Call 1-800-438-4318. Or, write to IAQ Info, P.O. Box 37133, Washington, D.C. 20013-7133; Fax: 202-484-1510; E-mail: iaqinfo@aol.com Research Training in Environmental Sciences The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), Duke University Medical Center, and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have established a joint, two-year fellowship program for training nurses and physicians in environmental medicine and health research. The training program defines environmental medicine as the study of diseases and other conditions due to exposure to physical and chemical agents in the environment, and factors that might alter susceptibility to such agents. The program encourages nurses and physicians to work closely with NIEHS scientists. Applications to this fellowship program are accepted throughout the year. To find out about current openings and to obtain a Training Program Application, contact Marcy Hirsch at Duke University: 919-684-6720. Or, contact Kelly Collier at UNC: 919-966-1435. More details about the program are also available on the Web: http:/ /www.niehs.nih.gov/ dirocr/ dukeunc/ #howtoapply 'U.S. Government Printing Office: 1997 -522·066/90331 Closing the Gap DEPARTMENT OF HEAL TH & HUMAN SERVICES Public Health Service Office of Minority Health Resource Center P.O. Box 37337 Washington DC 20013-7337 Official Business Penalty for Private Use $300 CONFERENCES November: 1-5: Annual meeting of the Ameri- can Academy of Pediatrics, New Orleans, Louisiana. Contact: 847- 228-5005, ext. 6338. 7-12: Annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology, San Diego, California. Contact: 847- 427-1200. 9-13: Annual conference of the American Public Health Associa- tion, Indianapolis, Indiana. Contact: 202-789-5670. BULK RATE POSTAGE AND FEES PAID DHHS/OPHS PERMIT NO . G-280 ~,ap 16-20: National Congress of American Indians, Santa Fe, New Mexico. Contact: 202-466-7767. December: 4-5: Annual conference of the National Perinatal Association. Contact: 813-971-1008. 7-9: "Managed Care Leadership Summit on International Health Care," Boca Raton, Florida. Contact: American Association of Health Plans, 202-778-3269. Conference on Poverty and Children's Health The Office of Minority Health is one of several sponsors of the U.S.-Mexico border binational conference on children's health, October 22-23 1997 ' ' El Paso, Texas. The University of Texas System and the Texas-Mexico Border Health Coordination Office are organizing the conference, entitled "Salud Sin Fronteras ... Health Without Boundaries, The Effects of Poverty on Children's Health." The conference will address several topics, including environmental health issues such as neural-tube defects along the U.S.- Mexico border, and the effects of second-hand smoke on children. .rormore information, call 210-381-3687. ly Dispatch · TRI-CODN'ff STATE · Wednesday, August 6, 1997 sac - Protester Deborah Ferruccio scales the fence surrou.,.ding the PCB landfill. ' I , re~ protestersJaiied ht W~r_r~J! ~ CHAflLIE RICHARDS Dally Dispatch Writer Staie lfjghway Patrol Sgt. J. In ita ~ tau. W-. A. lfndi waa called, and at 10 · Group· said it bad nquutecl a.m. Ken m cbargecl with ftrst · ~ &om EPA earlier this · c1ep-ee tnapaaa and taken to .year, and that one o1 ita ... WARRENTON - A Warren Wamm Det.ention Cent.er. Bia advilon had aareed the pru-·. County couple were in jail 'l\tes-boild was eet at $60() but he, ence of the advieon wu not . day night, having been arrested deelined to leaft the jail. needed during EPA 1181DplinJ. fer tre~ on ·atat,e property Wife Deborah WU notified. ".l'hia is tha meet aelllit.ive as they prot.t.ed the mmmer ht She sent their two cbildnn to method availabl•,•8Jaalt ml aa which air quality t.el&I are being lfay ·.m. fHends, aJert.ed newe he eet up sopbiatiaated ftltering, con~ at the PCP landftll media a 1NDt to the landft1l devices on super YaRUU tbat ntar·here. ·hmwlt'at 1 p.m. Meaawbile, law suck air tbroup ftir ..... Be Ken and Deborah Ferruomo, monemem NpreNDtatmls uid the method baa been-. Joq U.'fj'JJonenta ottbe land-hacl lea. ... in court, and that "lbiot chain Gf ftll and~ otita cleanup, After11111'wyiDgtbe dutiltioD, cuatody rwea" are fbllowed. · separaf,elycrcaed a f'eDce to CU.. Deborah aealed the pt,e iD the Explaining her opJl!)llltion, .ruptt.eating bytbe U.S. Environ-femrwbere then was no bariled Deborah· Ferruccio said "it mental ProtAlctionl,gency. · wire. She said she unpluged WGUldn't cost much to have a Late~ they were seek-some of the equipment tbe EPA split sample,• with an mclepen- ing adviee tram f'e1low ~-. agents were using but harmed dent ·teat. "Soientific t.eatmg , menta'.liat.s on their nm steps. no-equipnent. : without integrity ia the bean• Both wen .i.w ~ the early ... ..,.,. atate's Waste enviromneQtal iqunfae. 'Ibey 19808 when cftlw tried to P-. 1,.,...,, a■• llvlaiaD, • was wouldn't do tlda if it were · vent the state~ bmJi1II ~ then to )Jl'fMlle --to the Baleip or Dmbam! . . hazardous cbenucal waste m federal apnia, dMlll ~ l'rior to 'l,\J-1ay'1 madent, Wanen. At M time &m spent the gate and ..w ~~~-..,__ ·ancl othen in 19 days tasting in jail. QI.-• the a btr.d.,~ CGD-'l'he F . . . ._ Alloh oomib ' &om tbe, lendftll. They have J{elly &aid one sample of sev- . been 9Awl • . . ~~IF:'~ ..w i.iii.lr"_•• 11,, amce !PW staw an .... not to which has ·"WWW-a citizens haw asked tbr taste. · completel,y det.oidfy tna ~ plan to identify threats from the -(PCB Polychlorinated Biphenyl, Kelly said such an EPA order landfill and det.omy the dump. is a pojaoDoua ccmpound cmce is expected. Meanwlwe, the . 'l\te.$day night, Workint · used in elec:t:ric ~en.) reeults of other ieatiDg ani now Gfwp members cailferred aucl ~ 'nm Slagle and John Vail from being studied with the pn,apect iseued a stat.ement uying the Athens said their visit was in of a detoxilication plan · being Oto.up •cannot in good faith aup-response to those concema. The developed this :,ear: When a plan po~ any unilateral action by an Wamm site ·is treat.eel like a is found, the state will be asked individual tbatisnotinline with Supemmd sif.e they said and in to epend the millions neceaaary _ the group'• detoxiftcation goa1s. • "' those cases EPA does its own to remove U. P!>i89JUJ ,from the ... Wi_theat mentioning the Fer-testing at ita own~-. ~-· ~ ~ . •l'UCCJGS by name; the statement _ ·· 0, ---~ ~ their action but &aid· ' it CQWd not support_ any direct ,action thaflu1d not been brought · to the group first. . · Th'is latest dispute . concerns · the fact the EPA is conducting the air tests 'independent of an . overview by outside scientW,s. The Ferrucci~ say they can-_ not trust either the state or fed~ eral agencies because both were involved in e11tablishing an . 'unsafe landfill. pebore,h ~d she fears unchecked . ~st results would be made to show there is . . iio need t.o deto)cify the dump. When scienijsts fi:om the EPA lab in Athens, Ga., showed up . here Tuesday, Ken climbed the fence around the mound and refused to leave. ..